|
Kangaroos too
strong for the Tigers |
March 31, 2007 (Link to
Scorecard)
The
Kangaroos proved to be too strong and muscular
for the Tigers in what was a rain truncated
affair at the Sir Viv Richards Stadium. The
match conditions were not at all in favour of
the Banglas as they just had the 22 overs to put
up a total and then their three spinners have
the option of only restricting the batsmen. None
of this was possible with the Australians
blasting their way to a 10-wicket win.
A wet outfield delayed the start of the match by
as many as five hours. The match got underway at
18:30 GMT with Ricky Ponting asking Bangladesh
to take first strike on a hard wicket at
Antigua. The wicket as expected did have the
moisture because of the sweating under the
covers but that wasn't going to be an issue in a
shortened game of 22 overs per side.
Bangladeshis lost too many wickets too quickly
and could never ever recover. They were infact
in danger of getting bowled out but fortunately
for them, Saqibul Hasan (25 from 36 with a six)
and Habibul Bashar (24 from 43) dropped anchor
to get some respectability. Mashrafe Mortaza
came good with the long handle smashing 25 from
17 with two fours and a six off Symonds to take
Bangladesh to 104 for 6 at close.
The
Bangladeshi young batsmen were foxed in going
for the big and reckless shots by Glenn McGrath,
who smartly mixed up his pace along with the
lengths. McGrath took three wickets conceding
only 16 runs in his 5 overs. He also went past
Wasim Akram to become the highest wicket taker
in World Cup history. The only negative for the
Champs was Shane Watson pulling out mid way in
an over due to a calf muscle strain.
The target was hardly anything for the bulls led
by Matthew Hayden, who simply is in intimidating
form. But the pair of Gilchrist and Hayden took
a bit too long according to their standards to
get the 105. They took 13.5 overs to reach their
with Abdur Razzak delaying the victory by
bowling way too quick and flatter in the air.
Gilchrist reached a milestone, that of scoring
his 50th half century. Gilly played 44 balls for
his 59 with 8 fours and a six. Hayden didn't get
enough opportunities to complete a fifty, he had
to settle with 47 from 39 with 3 fours and 3
sixes. Another factor that had slowed down the
Australian charge was the fact that the outfield
was on the slower side due to the overnight
rain. The Man of the Match award went to the
nagging Glenn McGrath.
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